What Does the Noncompete Ban Ruling Mean?
The FTC first introduced the proposed rule in January 2023, with advocacy groups for nurses and hospitals making their voices heard.
Debbie Hatmaker, chief nursing officer and executive vice president of the American Nurses Association, said in a memo prior to the final FTC ruling that NCCs “undermine competition” and close markets to some workers, including nurses.
“This harms the employees as they are unable to work in their field without paying expensive penalties to their original employer,” Hatmaker wrote. “It may also harm employers as it severely limits the pool of possible employees.”
National Nurses United also supported the ruling, calling it a “step in the right direction.”
“We know that TRAPs and other stay-or-pay contracts exploit vulnerable new graduate nurses at the very start of their careers,” NNU President Nancy Hagans, RN, said in a news release. “We see the chilling effects these contracts have on a nurses’ ability to advocate on behalf of their patients when they face harassment, termination, and potentially ruinous financial consequences for speaking out about unsafe conditions that affect patient care.”
However, the American Hospital Association called the ruling “bad law” and “bad policy.”
“The agency’s stubborn insistence on issuing this sweeping rule — despite mountains of contrary legal precedent and evidence about its adverse impacts on the healthcare markets — is further proof that the agency has little regard for its place in our constitutional order,” said Chad Golder, AHA’s general counsel and secretary, said in a statement. “Three unelected officials should not be permitted to regulate the entire United States economy and stretch their authority far beyond what Congress granted it — including by claiming the power to regulate certain tax-exempt, non-profit organizations.”
In its comment letter to the FTC, the AHA argued that the ruling would “profoundly transform” the healthcare labor market and that the FTC doesn’t have the authority to issue the ruling.
“It would instantly invalidate millions of dollars of existing contracts, while exacerbating problems of healthcare labor scarcity, especially for medically underserved areas like rural communities,” wrote Melinda Reid Hatton, general counsel and secretary, in February 2023. “Perhaps most troubling, the FTC would take this monumental step on the apparent basis of economic research that does not actually support the proposed rule.”
Because of the ruling, workers across the board could see earnings increase by $524 annually alongside lower healthcare costs, the FTC said.
Nurses and the Noncompete Clause
Noncompete clauses can limit both the distance a former staffer can work from the current employer and establish a timeframe for how long a worker must wait to be employed in the same field, should they choose to leave their employer.
“One nurse told ANA that her non-compete agreement banned practicing in her field, emergency medicine, for five years after leaving her employer,” Hatmaker said. “The only recourse is extensive retraining if providers choose to leave their place of employment. The unnecessary training keeps providers out of the employment marketplace for the time that it takes to learn a new specialty, even if they want to remain focused on their existing specialty.”
But some nurses aren’t even aware they have a noncompete element in their contracts. A study published in 2015 in the “AANA Journal” looked at that awareness among nurse anesthetists and found that a majority of student registered nurse anesthetists and certified registered nurse anesthetists were unaware of the clause.
Of the 242 CRNAs who participated in the study, more than 60% didn’t have a noncompete and roughly 9% didn’t know if they had a noncompete in their contracts. The study authors also found a “significant difference in knowledge level” between CRNAs who practice independently and those who in a group practice.
“Independent CRNAs had more experience with declining positions, changing positions, and loss of employment due to NCCs,” the study stated. “More CRNAs believed the NCC is not applicable to practice, and no evidence existed to show a relationship between geographic location and having an NCC.”
In 2020, Jennifer Brown, a Wyoming nurse, was sued by her former employer to enforce an NCC and ordered to cease providing home health care. As a result, she had commuted more than two hours and took a $15 per hour pay cut to continue working in the field, according to a 2020 Full Stack Economics report.
“Not only did they take away my means to support myself — they took away my means to feed my granddaughter,” Brown told Full Stack Economics. “As a nurse, I should never have that problem.”
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